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For photographers

Be the photographer who's already in the group when someone asks

Local parenting, wedding and community groups are full of "can anyone recommend a photographer?" posts. ClientRadar catches them the moment they go up, scores how ready the person is to book, and drafts a reply in your voice — so you answer first, not three days late when the spot is gone.

  • Watches the groups you're already in for newborn, family, wedding and event session asks
  • Scores each post 0–100 for how ready they are to book, with a one-line reason
  • Drafts a warm, non-spammy reply in your voice — you read it, tweak it, post with a tap
  • Leads and notes stay on your own device; nothing posts automatically
In short

ClientRadar is a Chrome extension that helps photographers find clients in the Facebook groups, subreddits and feeds they already belong to. It monitors local parenting, wedding, "mom" and community groups for buying-intent posts — "can anyone recommend a newborn photographer?", "looking for someone for our wedding in October" — scores each one 0–100 for how ready the person is to book, and drafts a reply in your own voice. Unlike auto-posting bots that get accounts banned, ClientRadar never posts for you: a human reads and approves every reply, and your leads and CRM stay on your device.

Why bookings feel feast-or-famine even though the clients are right there

Most photographers don't have a lead problem — local groups generate "who should I book?" posts every week. They have a timing-and-selling problem. The asks scroll past while you're editing or shooting, and the few you catch feel awkward to answer without looking like a spammer.

You see the post three days too late

Someone posts "need a family photographer for next weekend" in your local mom group at 9am. By the time you scroll past it that evening, twelve other photographers have commented and they've already DM'd two of them. The window for these session asks is hours, not days, and you can't sit in the feed all day refreshing.

Groups ban self-promotion, so you can't just advertise

The biggest local and parenting groups have "no soliciting" rules, ban links, or only allow promo on a designated day. The only reliable way in is to be genuinely helpful when someone asks — but that means catching the exact recommendation thread, in time, with the right reply. Miss it and your only options break the rules.

You're brilliant behind the camera and allergic to selling

Replying to a stranger's post feels like cold-pitching, so you either overthink it for ten minutes or skip it entirely. The famine months aren't because nobody's asking — they're because answering well, fast, every time, is a sales muscle most photographers never wanted to build.

The leads you do catch fall through the cracks

A bride messages, you chat, she goes quiet, and you forget to follow up because you're shooting all weekend. No simple pipeline means warm leads cool off — and for session work, the follow-up is where most of the booking actually happens.

How ClientRadar turns your groups into steady bookings

Set it up once around the work you do, then check a calm list for a few minutes a day instead of doom-scrolling the feed.

Tell it what you shoot and where

Point ClientRadar at the local parenting, wedding, newborn and community groups you're already in, and describe the work you take — "newborn and family sessions within 30 miles of Leeds," say. It learns the asks worth surfacing and ignores the rest of the feed.

Catch the recommendation posts as they happen

While you shoot and edit, ClientRadar quietly watches those groups for buying-intent language — "can anyone recommend a photographer," "looking for someone for maternity shots," "who did your wedding photos?" — and pulls the real asks out of the noise.

Triage by who's actually ready to book

Each catch gets a 0–100 intent score with a one-line reason, so a bride with a date and a budget floats to the top and an idle "someday I'd love photos" sinks. You spend your few daily minutes only on people genuinely ready to hire.

Reply in your voice, then follow up

ClientRadar drafts a warm, helpful reply built from your Brand DNA — never a copy-paste pitch — for you to tweak and post with a tap. Save the lead, set a follow-up, and a simple on-device CRM makes sure the bride who went quiet gets a nudge before the date's gone.

Why ClientRadar fits photographers specifically

This isn't a generic monitoring tool pointed at your industry. The whole design — inbound, fast, voice-matched, and safe — maps onto how photography actually gets booked in local communities.

It's inbound, which is how local photography really sells

You're not cold-DMing strangers; you're answering people who literally just asked for a photographer in a group you belong to. That's the warmest lead there is, and it's exactly the moment groups' "no soliciting" rules still allow — a genuine, relevant reply to a direct request.

It respects the rules that get other tools banned

Auto-posters like the ones cracking down across Reddit and Meta get accounts suspended for spamming. ClientRadar never posts for you and runs human-paced inside your own logged-in browser. For a photographer whose Facebook page is part of their livelihood, keeping the account safe isn't a feature — it's the whole point.

Your client list and notes stay yours

Brides' names, session details, follow-up dates and CRM notes live in local storage on your own device — not in a vendor's database. Only a post's text and your short Brand DNA profile are ever sent off to score and draft. It's a smaller data footprint and a cleaner privacy story for the people who trust you with their family photos.

Where photographers catch clients with ClientRadar

Newborn & family sessions in local parenting groups

"Mom" and parenting groups are a steady drip of "who did your newborn photos?" and "need family pics before the baby comes" posts. ClientRadar surfaces them in time for you to be the friendly local name in the comments, not the eleventh.

Wedding & engagement inquiries

Engaged couples ask their local and wedding-planning groups for photographer recommendations months out. Catching those high-intent, high-value asks early — with a reply that sounds like you — is the difference between a booked season and a quiet one.

Events, branding and headshot work on Reddit & beyond

Beyond Facebook, ClientRadar watches Reddit, X and LinkedIn (on Max) for "need a photographer for our event" or "looking for headshots" posts — useful for photographers who also shoot corporate, real-estate or personal-branding work.

Filling the slow season before it bites

Instead of panic-marketing when bookings dry up, you keep a quiet, always-on line into the asks already happening in your community — turning the feast-or-famine cycle into a steadier trickle of qualified inquiries.

Questions, answered

How does ClientRadar help photographers find clients in Facebook groups?

It monitors the local parenting, wedding and community groups you already belong to for buying-intent posts — things like "can anyone recommend a newborn photographer?" — and surfaces them as they happen. Each post gets a 0–100 intent score so you can see who's genuinely ready to book, plus a draft reply in your own voice. You still read and post every reply yourself; ClientRadar just makes sure you catch the right asks in time and answer well.

Will using ClientRadar get my Facebook account banned?

It's designed specifically to avoid that. ClientRadar never auto-posts — a human approves every reply with a tap — and it runs at a natural, human pace inside your own logged-in browser, with no passwords stored. That's the key difference from auto-posting bots like Devi or ReplyGuy, which platforms have been suspending as Reddit and Meta crack down. That said, you should still follow each group's rules and only reply where a genuine recommendation is welcome; ClientRadar is an assistant, not an autopilot.

Isn't self-promotion against the rules in most local groups?

Unsolicited promo usually is — and that's exactly why ClientRadar focuses on recommendation threads. When someone directly asks "who should I book for newborn photos?", a helpful, relevant reply is welcomed where a cold advert would get you removed. The tool's job is to catch those direct asks in time so you're answering a question, not spamming the feed. Always check the specific group's rules before you post.

Do I have to keep the Facebook feed open all day?

No. ClientRadar watches the groups quietly in the background while you shoot and edit, then collects the real asks into a ranked list you can check in a few minutes a day. The point is to free you from doom-scrolling the feed, not chain you to it.

Is ClientRadar worth it for a photographer who only needs a few bookings a month?

It can be, precisely because photography sessions are high-value — one booked wedding or a couple of family sessions typically covers a year of the subscription many times over. But be honest about volume: if your local groups are tiny or quiet, manual scrolling or referrals may be enough, and you can start on the free tier to see how many real asks actually surface before paying. ClientRadar earns its keep when there's a steady trickle of inquiries you're currently missing.

What does it cost, and is there a free way to try it?

There's a free tier that lets you watch your Facebook groups and see the intent scoring on blurred leads, no card needed. Pro is €59/mo (€29/mo billed annually) for Facebook plus Reddit, and Max is €99/mo (€59/mo annually) to add X and LinkedIn — useful if you also shoot events, headshots or branding work. Every paid plan includes a 7-day trial, 50% off your first payment, and cancel-anytime.

See who's asking for a photographer in your groups — free

Start free, no card needed, and watch ClientRadar score real recommendation posts from your own Facebook groups. Go Pro from €29/mo (annual) for Facebook plus Reddit, with a 7-day trial and 50% off your first payment. Cancel anytime.

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